54:, or variant readings of the Qur'an, and is the first formal compiler of the different recitation styles. His most active period, during which his work was marked by new developments in lexicographical studies concerning the Qur'an, was from 752 until his death.
61:, the ethnically Persian father of Arabic grammar, though like other Qur'an readers he was quoted by Sibawayhi less frequently than pure grammarians, with only five quotes in the infamous
188:
Monique
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336:, pg. 161. Volume 19 of Studies in Semitic languages and linguistics. Leiden: Brill Publishers, 1993.
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tribe, and was later attributed to the tribe. He was affiliated with the Basran school of
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Religious History of the Jews: High Middle Ages, 500-1200
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Muslims: Cultural Dialogues in Postmodernity and Tradition
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137:, pg. 21. Part of the Makers of Islamic Civilization series.
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Scholar of the Arabic language and
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275:
Frederick M. Denny, "Exegesis and
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50:, al-A'war contributed significantly to the study of
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Arabic
Grammar and Qurʼānic Exegesis in Early Islam
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57:Ibn Musa was also one of the seven teachers of
20:Abu Abdullah Harun ibn Musa al-'Ataki al-A'war
22:(d. 170AH/786AD) was an early convert from
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111:List of converts to Islam from Judaism
38:. He converted while living among the
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65:. Additionally, he was a student of
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251:, pg. 129. Ed. Tulio Maranhao.
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371:Converts to Islam from Judaism
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229:University of Wisconsin Press
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106:List of converts to Islam
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217:Michael M. J. Fischer
71:Abu 'Amr ibn al-'Ala'
30:and a scholar of the
355:at Arabic Bookshop.
177:Harrassowitz Verlag
316:Monique Bernards,
46:. A specialist in
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143:I.B. Tauris
365:Categories
320:, pg. 209.
171:, pg. 26.
173:Wiesbaden
117:Citations
318:Pioneers
259:, 1990.
231:, 1990.
200:, 2011.
145:, 2004.
135:Sibawayh
100:See also
59:Sibawayh
307:, 1958.
253:Chicago
225:Madison
179:, 2006.
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